Panamintaspis

Panamintaspis
Temporal range: Late Emsian
artist's reconstruction
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Pteraspidomorphi
Subclass: Heterostraci
Order: Pteraspidiformes
Family: "Protopteraspididae"
Genus: Panamintaspis
Elliot & Ilyes, 1996
Species: P. snowi
Binomial name
Panamintaspis snowi
Elliot & Ilyes, 1996

Panamintaspis snowi is an extinct species of pteraspidid heterostracan agnathan which existed during the early Middle Devonian period of Death Valley, California.[1] Fossils are found in Late Emsian-aged marine strata of the Lost Burro Formation. P. snowi strongly resembles Pteraspis, though while it was originally described as a member of the same family, Pteraspididae,[1] a recent phylogenetic reassessment of the order Pteraspidiformes places P. snowi within the paraphyletic family "Protopeteraspidae," as the sister taxon of the suborder Pteraspidoidei (the super-taxon that contains Pteraspididae together with Protaspididae and Gigantaspis).[2]

The generic name refers to the Panamint Range in Death Valley where the holotype and other specimens were found. The specific name honors one J. C. Snow, the man who discovered the holotype.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Elliott, David K., and Robert R. Ilyes. "New Early Devonian pteraspidids (Agnatha, Heterostraci) from Death Valley National Monument, southeastern California." Journal of Paleontology (1996): 152-161.
  2. ↑ Pernegre, Vincent N., and David K. Elliott. "Phylogeny of the Pteraspidiformes (Heterostraci), Silurian–Devonian jawless vertebrates." Zoologica Scripta 37.4 (2008): 391-403.
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